paroles de chanson The Highwayman - Live - Loreena McKennitt
The
wind
was
a
torrent
of
darkness
among
the
gusty
trees
The
moon
was
a
ghostly
galleon
tossed
upon
the
cloudy
seas
The
road
was
a
ribbon
of
moonlight
over
the
purple
moor
And
the
highwayman
came
riding,
Riding,
riding,
The
highwayman
came
riding,
up
to
the
old
inn-door.
He′d
a
French
cocked
hat
on
his
forehead,
a
bunch
of
lace
at
his
chin,
A
coat
of
glaring
velvet,
and
breeches
of
brown
doe-skin;
They
fitted
with
never
a
wrinkle;
his
boots
were
up
to
the
thigh!
And
he
rode
with
a
chill
and
a
twinkle,
His
pistol
butts
a-twinkle,
His
rapier
hilt
a-twinkle,
under
the
jeweled
sky.
Over
the
cobbles
he
clattered
and
clashed
in
the
dark
of
night,
And
he
tapped
with
his
whip
on
the
shutters,
but
all
was
locked
and
barred;
He
whistled
a
tune
to
the
window,
and
who
should
be
waiting
there
But
the
landlord's
black-eyed
daughter,
Bess,
the
landlord′s
daughter,
Plaiting
a
dark
red
love-knot
into
her
long
black
hair.
"One
kiss,
my
bonny
sweetheart,
I'm
after
a
prize
tonight,
But
I
shall
be
back
with
the
yellow
gold
before
the
morning
light;
Yet
if
they
press
me
sharply,
and
harry
me
through
the
day,
Then
look
for
me
by
the
moonlight,
Watch
for
me
by
the
moonlight,
I'll
come
to
thee
by
the
moonlight,
though
hell
should
bar
the
way.
He
rose
upright
in
the
stirrups;
he
scarce
could
reach
her
hand
But
she
loosened
her
hair
i′
the
casement!
His
face
burnt
like
a
brand
As
the
black
cascade
of
perfume
came
tumbling
over
his
breast;
And
he
kissed
its
waves
in
the
moonlight,
(Oh,
sweet
waves
in
the
moonlight!)
Then
he
tugged
at
his
rein
in
the
moonlight,
and
galloped
away
to
the
west.
He
did
not
come
at
the
dawning;
he
did
not
come
at
noon,
And
out
of
the
tawny
sunset,
before
the
rise
o′
the
moon,
When
the
road
was
a
gypsy's
ribbon,
looping
the
purple
moor,
A
red-coat
troop
came
marching,
Marching,
marching
King
George′s
men
came
marching,
up
to
the
old
inn-door.
They
said
no
word
to
the
landlord,
they
drank
his
ale
instead,
But
they
gagged
his
daughter
and
bound
her
to
the
foot
of
her
narrow
bed;
Two
of
them
knelt
at
the
casement,
with
muskets
at
their
side!
There
was
death
at
every
window
Hell
at
one
dark
window;
For
Bess
could
see,
through
the
casement,
The
road
that
he
would
ride.
They
had
tied
her
up
to
attention,
with
many
a
sniggering
jest;
They
had
bound
a
musket
beside
her,
with
the
barrel
beneath
her
breast!
"Now
keep
good
watch!"
And
they
kissed
her.
She
heard
the
dead
man
say
"Look
for
me
by
the
moonlight
Watch
for
me
by
the
moonlight
I'll
come
to
thee
by
the
moonlight,
though
hell
should
bar
the
way!"
She
twisted
her
hands
behind
her,
but
all
the
knots
held
good!
She
writhed
her
hands
till
her
fingers
were
wet
with
sweat
or
blood!
They
stretched
and
strained
in
the
darkness
and
the
hours
crawled
on
by
like
years!
Till,
now,
on
the
stroke
of
midnight,
Cold,
on
the
stroke
of
midnight,
The
tip
of
one
finger
touched
it!
The
trigger
at
least
was
hers!
Tlot-tlot!
Had
they
heard
it?
The
horse-hoofs
ringing
clear
Tlot-tlot,
in
the
distance!
Were
they
deaf
that
they
did
not
hear?
Down
the
ribbon
of
moonlight,
over
the
brow
of
the
hill,
The
highwayman
came
riding,
Riding,
riding!
The
red-coats
looked
to
their
priming!
She
stood
up
straight
and
still!
Tlot
in
the
frosty
silence!
Tlot,
in
the
echoing
night!
Nearer
he
came
and
nearer!
Her
face
was
like
a
light!
Her
eyes
grew
wide
for
a
moment!
She
drew
one
last
deep
breath,
Then
her
finger
moved
in
the
moonlight,
Her
musket
shot
her
in
the
moonlight,
Shattered
her
breast
in
the
moonlight
and
warned
him
with
her
death.
He
turned;
he
spurred
to
the
west;
he
did
not
know
she
stood
Bowed,
with
her
head
o′er
the
musket,
drenched
with
her
own
red
blood!
Not
till
the
dawn
he
heard
it;
his
face
grew
grey
to
hear
How
Bess,
the
landlord's
daughter,
The
landlord′s
black-eyed
daughter,
Had
watched
for
her
love
in
the
moonlight,
and
died
in
the
darkness
there.
Back,
he
spurred
like
a
madman,
shrieking
a
curse
to
the
sky
With
a
white
rope
smoking
behind
him
and
his
rapier
brandished
high!
Blood-red
were
the
spurs
i'
the
golden
moon;
wine-red
was
his
velvet
coat,
When
they
shot
him
down
on
the
highway,
Down
like
a
dog
on
the
highway,
And
he
lay
in
his
blood
on
the
highway,
with
a
bunch
of
lace
at
his
throat.
Still
of
a
winter's
night,
they
say,
when
the
wind
is
in
the
trees,
When
the
moon
is
a
ghostly
galleon,
tossed
upon
the
cloudy
seas,
When
the
road
is
a
ribbon
of
moonlight
over
the
purple
moor,
The
highwayman
comes
riding,
Riding,
riding,
The
highwayman
comes
riding,
up
to
the
old
inn-door.
1 The Bonny Swans (Live)
2 The Lady of Shalott (Live At Salle Pleyel, Paris/1998)
3 The Lady of Shalott
4 The Old Ways (Live)
5 Bonny Portmore (Live At Massey Hall, Toronto/1998)
6 The Mystic's Dream (Live)
7 Dante's Prayer (Live At Massey Hall, Toronto/1998)
8 Bonny Portmore (Live)
9 The Old Ways (Live At Salle Pleyel, Paris/1998)
10 Cymbeline
11 Cymbeline (Live)
12 Cymbeline (Live At Massey Hall, Toronto/1998)
13 All Souls Night
14 All Souls Night (Live)
15 All Souls Night (Live At Massey Hall, Toronto/1998)
16 Dante's Prayer (Live)
17 Night Ride Across the Caucasus (Live)
18 Night Ride Across the Caucasus (Live At Massey Hall, Toronto/1998)
19 Night Ride Across the Caucasus
20 The Highwayman - Live
21 The Highway Man (Live At Salle Pleyel, Paris/1998)
22 Skellig (Live At Salle Pleyel, Paris/1998)
23 Skellig
24 Skellig (Live)
25 The Mummers' Dance (Live At Massey Hall, Toronto/1998)
26 The Mummers' Dance (Live)
27 The Mummers' Dance
28 Prologue (Live)
29 Prologue (Live At Salle Pleyel, Paris/1998)
30 Santiago
31 Night Ride Across the Caucasus
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